Maybe I'll answer the question on education.
We have about 2,500 full-time Brazilian students in Canada annually. The number of part-time students is about 15,000, as I said, annually. So Canada is the biggest destination for language students from Brazil—primarily studying English, but also French—for six months or less. Then they return to Brazil, and because of that certificate and that training, they can advance much more quickly in the job market there, having English as their second or third language.
So the number of full-time and part-time students is over 17,000 annually, which puts Brazil way up as a destination for foreign students in Canada.
We're also seeing benefit for Brazil from the scholarship programs. The Prime Minister has an emerging leaders in the Americas program, a Ph.D.-level scholarship for students from the Americas. Brazil has been the largest beneficiary of that program, again because they're well established and have good university-to-university linkages, so they can identify and send students to Canada under that program.
So across the board, the education story is very good.
Tourism is very good, as I mentioned. Our visa office in São Paulo is now the fourth largest visa-issuing office in the world, which is quite significant. It's a kind of circle, in that we talk about the multiplicity of engagement with Brazil. The air transport agreement now will facilitate code-sharing; it will facilitate access to airlines from both countries. All of this will generate more tourism, more students, and more business visitors.